Minerals (May 2024)

Genesis of the Baiyun Gold Deposit in Northeast Hubei Province, China: Insights from In Situ Trace Elements and S-Fe Isotopes of Sulfide

  • Weifang Song,
  • Jianzhong Liu,
  • Yuanbing Zou,
  • Xingping Liu,
  • Taocheng Long,
  • Jiandong Zhu,
  • Shengbo Fu,
  • Song Chen,
  • Yangfu Xiong,
  • Runjie Zhou,
  • Jingjing You,
  • Xinqi Zhou,
  • Zaixi Yang,
  • Jie Fang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/min14050517
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 5
p. 517

Abstract

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The Baiyun gold deposit is a medium-sized deposit in northeastern Hubei around the southern margin of the Tongbai-Dabie metallogenic belt. However, its genesis has not been determined. The metallogenic process of the Baiyun gold deposit can be divided into three stages: quartz + feldspar, quartz + native gold + electrum + polymetallic sulfides, and quartz + pyrite + calcite + iron dolomite + illite. In this study, LA-ICP-MS was used for in situ trace element and isotope analyses in the main and late ore stage hydrothermal sulfides to evaluate the genesis and evolution of ore-forming fluids. Gold is positively correlated with Ag, Cu, Pb, Zn, and Te and the Co/Ni ratio is greater than 1. The S isotope values of Py1 and Py2 are −0.23–3.04‰ and 1.27–6.09‰, respectively. As mineralization progressed, S isotope values increased. In situ S isotope values of the two types of galena symbiotic with pyrite in the main metallogenic stage are 2.97–3.47‰. In situ Fe isotopic values of pyrite are −0.05–0.82‰; values in the two stages are similar without significant fractionation. We inferred that the Baiyun gold deposit formed via magmatic mineralization related to the subduction of the Pacific Plate during the Yanshanian.

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